Mr. Thomas A. Davis, Jr., Director Texas Department of Public Safety Post Office Box 4087 Austin, Texas 78773-0001
Re: Whether section
Dear Mr. Davis:
Enacted by the Eightieth Legislature as part of a homeland security measure, section
I. Section 521.032 , Texas Transportation Code
Section 521.032 authorizes the Department to issue an enhanced driver's license that can be used to cross the border between Texas and Mexico.See id. Section 521.032 provides that an enhanced driver's license or personal identification certificate may be issued to "an applicant who provides . . . proof of United States citizenship, identity, and state residency." Id. The section also requires biométrie identifiers of applicants as well as security measures to protect information included in the enhanced driver's license or personal identification certificate. Seeid. § 521.032(b) (requiring one-to-many biométrie matching system2
and limiting use of same), (c) (requiring reasonable security measures for privacy and protection against unauthorized disclosure and *Page 2
requiring encryption of any included radio frequency identification chips3). Section 521.032 authorizes the Department to adopt rules necessary to implement the section. See id. § 521.032(d). And it requires the Department to monitor technological innovations related to security and to amend its rules as appropriate to protect the privacy of individuals holding an enhanced driver's license or personal identification certificate. See id.
Section 521.032 authorizes the Department to "enter into a memorandum of understanding with any federal agency for the purposes of facilitating the crossing of the border between this state and Mexico." Id. § 521.032(f). Section 521.032 further authorizes the Department to "enter into an agreement with Mexico, to the extent permitted by federal law, to implement a border crossing initiative authorized by this section." Id.
II. Federal Preemption
You ask whether section 521.032 conflicts with current federal law.4 See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 3. The issuance of driver's licenses has typically been a function of the individual states. See State v. Wilder,There are three ways in which a state law may be preempted. Cipollone
v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
III. Federal Passport Requirements
Current federal law requires that a United States citizen have a valid United States passport to "depart from or enter, or attempt to depart from or enter, the United States." Immigration and Nationality Act § 215,(b) When entering from or departing to a foreign port or place within the Western Hemisphere, excluding Cuba, by land or sea; or
. . .
(f) When the U.S. citizen bears another document, or combination of documents, that the Secretary of Homeland Security has determined under Section 7209(b) of Pub.L.
108-458 (8 U.S.C. 1185 note) to be sufficient to denote identity and citizenship;. . . .
Passport Requirement and Exceptions,
The passport requirement exceptions are being revised in a joint Department of Homeland Security (the "DHS") and Department of State (the "DOS") two-stage rulemaking.5 This two-stage joint DHS and DOS plan is described as the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, or WHTI.6
Under the first stage, effective January 23, 2007, United States citizens arriving into or departing from the United States at anair port-of-entry must have a valid United States passport. See Passport *Page 4
Requirement and Exceptions,
The two-stage joint DHS and DOS rulemaking under WHTI, however, is anticipated to leave in place the current passport requirement exception that permits entry into and departure from the United States
[w]hen the U.S. citizen bears another document, or combination of documents, that the Secretary of Homeland Security has determined under Section 7209(b) of Pub.L.
108-458 (8 U.S.C. 1185 note) to be sufficient to denote identity and citizenship[.]
Id § 53.2(f).9 The referenced section 7209(b) of Public Law
develop and implement a plan as expeditiously as possible to require a passport or other document, or combination of documents, deemed by the Secretary of Homeland Security to be sufficient to denote identity and citizenship, for all travel into the United States by United States citizens;. . . .
the signing of a memorandum of agreement to initiate a pilot program with not less than one State to determine if an enhanced driver's license, which is machine-readable and tamper proof, not valid for certification of citizenship for any purpose other than admission into the United States from Canada or Mexico, and issued by such State to an individual, may permit the individual to use the driver's license *Page 5 to meet the documentation requirements under subparagraph (A) for entry into the United States from Canada or Mexico at land and sea ports of entry.
See Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, supra note 10 (to be codified at
IV. Analysis
With this background regarding the evolving federal passport requirement framework, we address your question regarding whether sectionFederal law may also impliedly preempt state law if Congress intended to occupy the field, if there is an actual conflict between the federal law and the state law, or if state law stands as an obstacle to the federal purpose. Freightliner Corp.,
In that comprehensive scheme, however, Congress affirmatively calls for state regulatory involvement. See Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, supra note 10 (to be *Page 6
codified at
Section 521.032 would conflict with federal law regarding passports only if it authorizes an enhanced driver's license that does not conform to section 7209(b). Section 7209(b) requires the alternative document or combination of documents to be machine-readable and tamper proof.Id. It further requires the document or combination of documents to be sufficient to denote citizenship and identity as determined by the Secretary of Homeland Security.
An enhanced driver's license issued under section 521.032 must also be determined by the Secretary of Homeland Security to sufficiently denote citizenship and identity.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT, Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN, First Assistant Attorney General
ANDREW WEBER, Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER, Chair, Opinion Committee
CHARLOTTE M. HARPER, Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
